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       Jesus on Vacation

A sermon by Dr. Jim Somerville,
Pastor, Richmond’s First Baptist Church
Richmond, Virginia
Sunday, August 17, 2008
The Fourteenth Sunday after Pentecost

 

Matthew 15:21-28 

In a book called Leaving Church Barbara Brown Taylor talks about how busy she was as the assistant rector at a big, Episcopal church in Atlanta.  She says, “I preached, celebrated the sacraments, visited the sick, and educated the young.  I met with the steady stream of people who showed up at the church door looking for food, shelter, medical care, and sympathy.  I also proofread the bulletin, recruited Sunday school teachers, kept the roster for nursing home visitations, and attended a great many committee meetings.”  She says that because she was the assistant and not the rector she did get a break when she finally went home at night.  She didn’t get those 3:00 a.m. calls when someone ended up in the emergency room or a loved one was found lifeless on a bathroom floor.  She didn’t get those other calls either, when someone was furious about the way the finance committee was investing the church endowment or the way a Sunday school teacher had spoken to a child.

Still, she stayed busier than she could believe.  “With just seven days in a week,” she asked, “where is the time to be a good preacher, teacher, pastor, prophet, celebrant, prayer, writer, foot washer, administrator, community activist, clergy colleague, student of scripture, and wholesome exemplar of the gospel”?  That last part was the hardest of all, she claims, being “a wholesome example of the gospel,” something she had promised to do when she was ordained.  She tried to be a good example, but she wondered if being good was the same as being whole.  And when she dreamed about the things that made her more whole, most of those dreams had no other people in them, which seemed like a betrayal of her calling to pastoral ministry.  “I dreamed of renting a cottage on a deserted beach and spending one whole week beyond the sound of another human voice,” she writes.  “I dreamed of taking a pile of books to a house in the woods and reading one whole volume every day without interruption.  I dreamed of living for a while in a town where I knew no one and did not speak the language so I could go to the store for butter or sit all night in a café without anyone recognizing me.”  But she was trying to be a wholesome example to others, she says, and her own wholesome example was Christ, and when she looked at his life she did not see him taking any time off to read or relax.  Instead, she says, “I saw someone who was always feeding people, healing people, teaching people, helping people.”[1]

I don’t want to disagree with Barbara Brown Taylor, who is as able a student of the scriptures as ever lived, but I think that if you will look closely at today’s Gospel text you will see a slightly different picture emerging.  In the chapter that precedes our reading for today Jesus has been “feeding people, healing people, teaching people, helping people.”  He has been doing it until he is exhausted.  He needs a break. 

Look at the clues: 

§       In chapter 14, verse 13, Jesus got in a boat with his disciples and “withdrew to a deserted place by himself.”  But when the crowds heard it, they followed him on foot from the towns, so that when Jesus stepped ashore he saw a crowd of some 5,000 people waiting for him and, because he was Jesus, he had compassion for them, and taught them, and eventually fed them. 

§       In the paragraph beginning at 14:34, Matthew tells us that when Jesus and his disciples crossed back over the Sea of Galilee later they came to land at Gennesaret, and after the people of that place recognized him, they sent word throughout the region and brought all who were sick to him, and begged him that they might touch even the fringe of his cloak; and all who touched it were healed” (34-36). 

You get a picture of Jesus and his disciples surrounded by crowds of people who are begging to touch the fringe of his cloak, putting their sick family members in his path, pressing around him so closely, and with such a clamor, that he can hardly hear himself think, much less take time for a meal.  Barbara Brown Taylor says, “When he tried to withdraw from these people, they followed him.  When they tried to eat him up, he did not resist.  ‘Take, eat, this is my body, given for you,’ he said, holding out a loaf of [bread].  Like a single mother, he fed his spiritual offspring from his own flesh and blood until all of his reserves were gone.  Then he died, and, though he rose from the dead three days later, this was quite an act to follow,” she says.  “When I looked at his life I did not see any beach cottages or all night cafes.”

But look at Matthew 15:21, which says, “Jesus left that place and went away to the district of Tyre and Sidon.”  He went away, Matthew says, meaning, I think, that he went away from all those crowds of people, and he went to the district of Tyre and Sidon which, according to the map in the back of your Bible, is a district along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea.   Mark, in his version of this story, says that Jesus “entered a house and did not want anyone to know he was there.”  I have to confess that I’ve done that before.  I used to take my family to the same beach house summer after summer, and I made it a point not to get to know the neighbors too well.  Once you let it slip that you’re a minister they start coming by in the evenings, sitting on the porch with you, telling you their troubles.  Ordinarily, I don’t mind that sort of thing at all.  I’m glad to listen and I love to help.  But when I’m on vacation, well, that’s different.  Vacation is, almost by definition, a time when you take a break from the ordinary.

So, while neither Matthew nor Mark say that Jesus was on vacation, they do say that he went away to the Mediterranean coast, that he entered a house, and that he didn’t want anyone to know that he was there.  Sounds like a vacation to me.  Again, I don’t want to disagree with Barbara Brown Taylor but I can imagine a nice pastel-colored beach cottage somewhere on the shores of the Mediterranean, with Jesus sitting on the front porch, gazing out over those deep blue waters, savoring those delicious breezes.  I can imagine that the sweetest thing of all for him would be the silence and the solitude of such a place, with nothing but the occasional cry of a gull and the sound of the surf to distract him.   You wouldn’t hold such a thing against him, would you?  Everybody needs a break from time to time.  But suddenly the silence was broken by the sound of this woman coming up the front steps in her flip-flops, calling for his help. 

“Have mercy on me, Lord!  I know you’re on vacation.  But my daughter is possessed by a demon.  I need your help.”  And if Jesus had a widow’s mite for every time he had heard that request he would have been a rich man.  He had been surrounded by crowds of people, remember?  They had been pressing in against him, begging to touch the fringe of his cloak.  He hadn’t even been able to eat.  And now, when he has finally gotten a few minutes’ peace, here comes this Canaanite woman.  She’s from another country.  She has a different religion.  It would be like a Muslim woman coming to me on vacation, asking for help.  I might not say it but I would wonder: “Isn’t there a mosque you could go to?  An Imam you could ask?  Why are you coming to me?”  And so I can almost forgive Jesus for what he does next, which is nothing at all.  Apparently he just keeps looking off into the distance, pretending not to hear, until the disciples come begging him to send her away.  “She keeps shouting after us,” they say.  “Do something!”  And so he tells her, “I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.”  In other words, “I can’t help you.  I’m up here in Gentile territory.  I am way out of my jurisdiction.”  But this woman comes and kneels before him, bowing her head to the ground and begging, “Lord, help me.”  It is the request Jesus has never been able to refuse, but this time he says, “It isn’t fair to take the children’s food and throw it to the dogs.”  It is another way, but not a more polite way, of saying, “Go away, woman, you’re bothering me.”

And yet she won’t go away.  Jesus is not just her best hope, he is her only hope.  She looks up into his face, her eyes searching for some flicker of empathy.  “Yes, Lord,” she says, “yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their masters’ table.”  It’s a good answer.  It is such a good answer that Jesus looks into those pleading eyes and feels his resolve crumbling.  He can’t help himself.  Above the weariness of his human nature and the strength of his divine nature it is his nature to feel with those who are hurting and want to do something about it.  Christ, thy name is compassion.  And so he says to her, “Woman, great is your faith!  Let it be done for you as you wish.”  Even as he did it he must have known what it would mean.  Soon the news would spread, and before long everyone in town would be coming up those front steps, begging for mercy.  His vacation would be over.  But he did it anyway, and the woman went home to find her daughter sleeping in her own bed, resting in perfect peace for the first time in years.

There is a word for what preachers do when they try to explain why bad things happen to good people.  It’s called theodicy, and it comes from two Greeks words that mean, essentially, “to justify God.”  Theodicy is how we try to get God off the hook, how we try to convince people that even though terrible things happen, God is still loving and still powerful.  Today I’ve been doing something that might be called Christodicy—I’ve been trying to get Jesus off the hook.  I’ve been trying to convince you that even though he first ignores this woman, and then tells her it’s not his problem, and then calls her a Canaanite dog, he is still loving and compassionate.  “He was just worn out,” I’ve been saying.  “He needed a break.” 

Surely you can sympathize.  We have all said or done things we have regretted, and often we have said them or done them when we were tired, when we just weren’t ourselves.  That’s the excuse I’ve been trying to make for Jesus today:  he was tired; he wasn’t himself.  The fact that I have spent most of the sermon trying to justify his behavior suggests that his behavior was uncharacteristic, that usually, instead of putting people down, he lifted them up.  And that’s true, isn’t it?  Follow Jesus through the Gospels and you will see that it is his way, usually, to reach down into the depths of human misery to lift people up.  The force that he used was humanizing rather than dehumanizing.  And that’s what makes this story so difficult.  In it we see Jesus ignoring this woman, dismissing her, and finally insulting her.  It isn’t like him at all.  And maybe that’s what we are supposed to learn from this story—that ignoring, dismissing, or insulting a fellow human being is not Christlike behavior.  When we see it in him it shocks us; we scramble to explain.  But what about when he sees it in us?  Is he shocked by our behavior, or is it just what he has come to expect?

I know I’ve been guilty, and I know it usually happens when I’m tired.  When I was living in Wingate, North Carolina, there was an indigent couple that used to come asking for help all the time.  They lived in a tiny camper at the edge of a field and they really didn’t have anything.  They needed help.  But sometimes when I was exhausted from all those things Barbara Brown Taylor talks about—from preaching sermons and educating the young and visiting the sick and proofreading the bulletin—I just didn’t want to deal with them.  It was easy in those times to think of all the reasons I shouldn’t deal with them: they weren’t members of my church; helping them would only make them more dependent; someone else might need that money.  I was tempted to say, “It isn’t fair to take the children’s food and throw it to the dogs.”  Except these weren’t dogs.  They were people.  And that’s something I learned from that Canaanite woman.  No matter how much Jesus ignored her, dismissed her, insulted her she never stopped believing that her daughter was worth something, and eventually she convinced him that she was worth something too.  Instead of seeing her as a Canaanite dog he came to see her as a woman of great faith.

It may be only a coincidence but at the end of this Gospel Jesus doesn’t tell his followers to go and make disciples among the lost sheep of the house of Israel.  He tells them to go and make disciples of every nation, including that nation where the Canaanite woman lived.  Is it possible that she persuaded him?  That while he was on vacation Jesus learned that the love of God was big enough not only for the house of Israel, but for the whole human race?  Is it possible he learned that among the people of the world there is no one we can ignore, dismiss, or insult, but that all people everywhere—people of every class and race and culture—are the children of God?  It sounds possible to me.  It sounds like the truth.  In fact, it sounds like the gospel truth.

—Jim Somerville ©2008


[1] Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 2006), pp. 45-47.

 

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